Yes, that is what I'm saying. "Nothing" means no space, no time, no energy, no particles, no fields, no interactions... not even any "meta-rules," as you put it. Existence is fundamentally the context of everything, regardless of at how many levels we can describe it, or how many forms the rules could or do take. When we discuss phenomena within the context, it can make sense to say "why is there X rather than not X (or Y, or Z...)", but it doesn't make sense to discuss the context itself in that way.
it doesn't make sense to discuss the context itself in that way.
As I think of it, it does make sense to talk about the wider context of the rules, which are the meta-rules, but it does not make sense to demand a context that cannot itself be described within a wider context.
(If a (meta-[meta-{meta-...}])ruleset had a horizontal slice of the meta-tower identical to the other immediately higher and lower slices, then it would provide its own context. Somehow the rules and meta-rules would have to be identical, but it would still have a context, it just wo...
Does the Universe Need God? (essay by Sean Carroll)
In this essay, Sean Carroll:
Dissolves the problem of "creation from nothing":
Uses Bayesian reasoning to judge possible explanations:
Correctly describes parsimony in terms of Kolmogorov complexity:
Discusses "meta-explanatory accounts":
Points out the theory-saving in and the predictive issues of God as a hypothesis:
See also his blog entry for more discussion of the essay.
Edit: added the bullet point about "meta-explanatory accounts."